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Date:
Sat, 16 Jun 2007 10:12 WesternIndonesiaTime
Subject:
Rumor of President Bush' Watch Stolen in Albania
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Hands reach out to grab the arms of U.S. President George
Bush, as he greets crowds of Albanians in Fushe Kruje,
Albania, in this Sunday, June 10, 2007 file photo. The watch
worn by President Bush on his left wrist, when he arrived.
appeared to mysteriously disappear while he was engaging
with the crowd.
(AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, file)
AP - Tue Jun 12, 9:39 AM ET
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Hands reach out to grab the arms of U.S. President George
Bush, as he greets crowds of Albanians in Fushe Kruje,
Albania, in this Sunday, June 10, 2007 file photo. The watch
worn by President Bush on his left wrist, when he arrived.
appeared to mysteriously disappear while he was engaging
with the crowd.
(AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, file)
AP - Tue Jun 12, 9:32 AM ET
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Hands reach
out to grab the arms of U.S. President George Bush, as
he greets crowds of Albanians in Fushe Kruje, Albania,
in these Sunday, June 10, 2007 file photos. There were
rumours on Tuesday that US President George Bush had
lost his watch while greeting crowds in the Albanian
town of Fushe Kruje on Sunday.One moment Bush was
greeting Albanians who had turned out to meet him, and
was wearing a watch with a dark strap on his left wrist.
Moments later, it was gone. Did it fall off? Did one of
his bodyguards remove it?Or did one of the crowd
artfully slip it off his wrist and pocket it? The White
House on Tuesday emphatically denied that Bush's watch
was stolen during his visit to the country, where he was
warmly welcomed and acclaimed as a hero.
(AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, file)
AP - Tue Jun 12, 1:11 PM ET
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A combination picture of
eight television grabs shows (top row from left to
right, bottom row from left to right) U.S. President
George W. Bush initially wearing his wristwatch as
he arrives to greet Albanians but is later seen
without the watch in Fushe Kruje, outside of the
capital Albania June 10, 2007. Reports that Bush had
his wristwatch stolen while shaking hands with
Albanians on his weekend visit are false, Albanian
police and the U.S. Embassy said on Tuesday.
Photographs show Bush, surrounded by five
bodyguards, putting his hands behind his back so one
of the bodyguards could remove his watch. Pictures
taken from footage shot June 10, 2007.
REUTERS/Albania TV via Reuters TV
Reuters
- Wed Jun 13,11:48 AM ET |
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Latest movie of
Fantastic Four released in 2007, Rise of the
Silver Surfer. |
Bush
dismisses as 'ludicrous'
story
that his watch was stolen in Albania
Wed Jun 13, 3:19 PM ET
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush
wants the story of his vanishing watch to disappear. Video
coverage of the U.S. president's wild stop in Albania over
the weekend showed that Bush's watch seemed to disappear
from his wrist as he greeted the locals. That led Albanian
and U.S. media - and buzzing websites - to raise questions
about whether the watch had been swiped.
The White House says the watch
was not stolen, and that Bush instead had put it in his
pocket. The mystery of the missing timepiece happened near
the end of Bush's eight-day trip to Europe.
In Albania, he was met by a
rapturous crowd of people who grabbed him by the arms and
wrists and even ruffled his hair. Bush was clearly delighted
by the attention. But he was rather ticked by the subsequent
reports.
"I have never seen such a
ludicrous story," Bush said Wednesday of the media's
coverage. "Unbelievable."
Just to prove the point, Bush
rolled up his sleeve to show photographers in the Oval
Office that he was wearing the watch. Later, spokesman Tony
Snow confirmed, "That is, in fact, the watch he was wearing
in Albania."
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Late at night June 13, 2007, on a
national TV I watched the news about president Bush experiencing his
watch stolen during shake hands with some crowd of people in
Albania. Later on when I search for the related news at the
Internet, it was denied.
Nevertheless for me it was like
containing a special message. because the news appeared after my
previous letter
A Test of Getting Wealthy, whereas on top of the same page of
that letter there was another letter of
Microsoft Profits Record High which contains an article by AP
Business Writer JESSICA MINTZ. Combining the first name of
Jessica Mintz with Albania, could turn to Jessica Alba who starred
at the movie Fantastic Four. Well, maybe my writing about such a
test could result in fantastic end.
.............
Date:
Sat, 16 June 2007 10:33 WesternIndonesiaTime
Subject:
Six Babies Born at Arizona And Minnesota
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Doctors shows Jenny Masche one
of her sextuplets born Monday, June 11, 2007, in Phoenix,
Ariz. Hospital officials say Masche, 32, gave birth by
Caesarean section at Banner Good Samaritan Hospital in
central Phoenix to three boys and three girls. The babies
were born prematurely after 30 weeks and four days, and all
but one weighed less than three pounds.
(AP Photo/The
Arizona Republic, Catherine J. Jun)
AP - Mon Jun 11,
4:15 PM ET
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Sextuplets in Arizona and Minnesota
By CHRIS KAHN,
Associated Press Writer
Mon Jun 11, 8:23 PM
ET
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PHOENIX - Two sets
of sextuplets were born in different states less
than a day apart, a rare occurrence but one that
fertility experts say could become increasingly
common as more couples seek artificial methods
of conceiving babies.
Brianna Morrison,
24, who used fertility drugs, gave birth just
before midnight Sunday in Minneapolis.
About 10 hours
later, Jenny Masche, 32, who used artificial
insemination, gave birth Monday in Phoenix by
Caesarean section, the first successful
sextuplet delivery in Arizona.
"It is something
that we're going to be dealing with more and
more," unless doctors learn how to reduce the
risk of women having four or more babies, said
Dr. F. Sessions Cole, a pediatrics professor at
Washington University in St. Louis. Morrison's
four boys and two girls were premature,
delivered after just 22 weeks. Doctors at
Children's Hospital listed them in critical
condition Monday afternoon, with weights ranging
between 11 ounces and 1 pound, 3 ounces.
"The babies arrived
sooner than we'd hoped for, but we are
optimistic," father Ryan Morrison said in a
statement. "Brianna is doing well. Thanks to all
who are praying for our family. We are very
happy to be parents." The Masche sextuplets —
three boys and three girls — were almost 10
weeks premature, and all but one weighed less
than three pounds. On Monday, five of the six
were on ventilators to help them breathe. Their
tiny lungs are underdeveloped, said Dr. Jordan
Leonard, who is overseeing the Masche babies at
Phoenix Children's Hospital. He said medications
the mother was taking to prevent labor had a
side effect of making them sleepy. |
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"So they come out a
little sedated," he said. The babies should
leave the hospital in six to eight weeks.
The chances of
spontaneously conceiving sextuplets is one in
4.7 billion, although the odds improve
significantly with fertility treatment, said Dr.
Helain Landy of Georgetown University Hospital's
Obstetrics and Gynecology Department. The
Morrisons, of the Minneapolis suburb of St.
Louis Park, spent more than a year trying to
conceive before agreeing to fertility drugs,
according to the couple's personal Web site.
Upon learning
Brianna Morrison was carrying sextuplets,
doctors advised the couple to opt for selective
reduction, in which women carrying multiple
fetuses reduce the number of viable fetuses to
two. "However, we knew right away that this is
not an option for us," the couple wrote. "We
understand that the risk is high, but we also
understand that these little ones are much more
than six fetuses. "Each one of them is a miracle
given to us by God." They named them Lucia Rae,
Cadence Alana, Bennet Ryan, Tryg Benton, Lincoln
Sean and Sylas Christopher.
In Arizona, Jenny
Masche used artificial insemination and
medication to stimulate her ovulation cycle,
Leonard said. Their children are named Bailey
Elizabeth, Savannah Jane, Molli Grace, Cole
Robert, Blake Nickolas and Grant William. Father
Bryan Masche, 29, said in an interview last week
that the couple were terrified when they learned
in December they were going to have six babies.
"We're blessed and
excited," he said. "I keep coming back to the
Bible verse that says, 'God will never leave or
forsake us.'" |
Associated Press
writer Moises D. Mendoza contributed to this
report. |
Minnesota sextuplet dies
By AMY FORLITI,
Associated Press Writer
Thu Jun 14 6:21 PM
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MINNEAPOLIS - A sextuplet born prematurely to a Minnesota
couple has died, and his five siblings were in critical
condition, hospital officials said Thursday. Bennet Ryan
Morrison died Wednesday night, and the other babies remained
in critical condition Thursday at the neonatal intensive
care unit at Children's Hospital in Minneapolis.
The
Minnesota sextuplets, born Sunday, were one of two sets born
within 10 hours of each other this week. In Arizona, Jenny
and Brian Masche became parents to six babies on Monday.
Doctors say it was a rare occurence, but one that could
become increasingly common as more couples seek
artificial methods of conceiving babies. Parents
Ryan and Brianna Morrison, |
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of St. Louis Park, issued a statement Thursday
expressing thanks for the support of families, friends and
churches and for the work of hospital staff.
"Our faith
remains strong in the midst of mourning our son," the Morrisons said.
The Morrisons, both 24, spent more than a
year trying to conceive before Brianna Morrison started
taking fertility drugs, and had success with the drug
Follistim, according to the couple's personal Web site. The
Morrison sextuplets — four boys and two girls — were born
about 4 1/2 months early.
Their weights ranged from between
11 ounces to 1 pound, 3 ounces, according to a hospital
spokeswoman.
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Second Minnesota Sextuplet Dies
Associated Press
Saturday June 16, 7:40 AM
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A second sextuplet born prematurely to a Minnesota couple
has died, hospital officials said Friday.
The boy, Tryg
Brenton Morrison, died Thursday night. Tryg's brother Bennet
Ryan died Wednesday night.
The four surviving babies remained in critical condition
Friday in the neonatal intensive care unit at Children's
Hospital in Minneapolis.
The four boys and two girls were born Sunday in the 22nd
week of pregnancy _ about 4 1/2 months early _ and weighed
from 11 ounces |
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to 1 pound, 3
ounces, a hospital spokeswoman said.
Experts say that at 22 weeks, many of a baby's major organs
_ including the skin, brain, kidneys and lungs _ are
underdeveloped.
Hospital officials said no further information would be
released. Parents Ryan and Brianna Morrison, both 24, spent
more than a year trying to conceive before
Brianna Morrison was able to conceive using
fertility drugs.
Doctors had advised them to selectively reduce the number of
viable fetuses to two, but they declined. |
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A rare occurrence about two
sets of sextuplets born in different states less than a
day apart. Six babies of a Minnesota couple were born
from Brianna Morrison, 24, who used fertility drugs,
just before midnight Sunday in Minneapolis. Another six
were born about 10 hours
later, from Jenny Masche, 32, who used
artificial insemination, who gave birth Monday in
Phoenix, Arizona.
These double birth of six
babies at Arizona and Minnesota is like related with my
first name A.M., and the six that means "enam" in
Indonesian which like the words "end A.M.", like related
with my consent to move to the eternity.
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